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  1. Many speakers will insert \ \ after \ \ when it precedes \l\. Additionally, some speakers pronounce \ \ and \i\ identically before \l\, with the result that word pairs like heel and hill are homophones. The sound pronounced in such cases may be either \ \ or \i\ as pronounced by those who distinguish the two. \ e \.

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  2. A key to understanding the pronunciation of dictionary words. ... This pronunciation key outlines how to pronounce the letters and symbols in these systems, with ...

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  4. Symbol. Explanation. \&\. as a in b a nan a and a but, as o in c o llide. \'&, "&\. as u in h u mdr u m and ab u t. \ [^&]\. immediately preceding \l\, \, \m\, \ [ng]\, as le in batt le, en in kitt en and eat en and sometimes op en \'Op- [^&]m\; immediately following \l\, \m\, \r\, as often le in French tab le, me in French pris me, and re in ...

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    The following tables show the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and the English pronunciation (enPR) or American Heritage Dictionary (AHD) symbols that are used to represent the various sounds of the English language. The sounds of Received Pronunciation (RP, UK), General American pronunciation (GenAm, US), Canadian English (CanE), Australian E...

    Wikipedia's article on English phonology
    Wikipedia's IPA chart for English dialects (and for conversion to ASCII, the SAMPA chart for English)
    Wikipedia's article on Pronunciation respelling for English
    Gimson, A. C. (1980) An Introduction to the Pronunciation of English, 3rd edn. edition, London: Edward Arnold, →ISBN
    Kenyon, John S.; Thomas A. Knott (1944/1953) A Pronouncing Dictionary of American English, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, →ISBN
    Wells, J. C. (2000) Longman Pronunciation Dictionary, 2nd edn. edition, Harlow, Essex: Pearson Education Limited, →ISBN
  5. b: buy, cab: d: dye, cad, ladder: dj: dew: dʒ: giant, badge ð: thy, breathe, father f: find, leaf: ɡ: guy, bag: h: high, ahead hw: whine: j: yes, hallelujah k: kind, sky, crack: l: lie, ply, gal: lj: lute: m: my, smile, cam: n: nigh, snide, can: nj: new: ŋ: sang, sink, singer p: pie, spy, cap: r: rye, try, very s: sigh, mass: sj: consume ...

  6. Merriam Webster Pronunciation Symbols. All pronunciation information is printed between reversed virgules. Pronunciation symbols are printed in roman type and all other information, such as labels and notes, is printed in italics.

  7. Weak vowels, e.g., the final vowels in words such as added and beautiful, are typically not as high as in British English. Weak vowels in words such as added tend towards schwa except where the most recent preceding vowel ended high and front ( /i, ɪ, eɪ, aɪ, ɔɪ/ ), in which case /ɪ/ might be found, or more often a quality on the ɪ-ə ...

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